Word: judgemental
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Dean David's genius for getting along with all sorts of individuals and getting them to do what he wishes constitutes a towering organizational talent. Directorates so respect the corollary good judgement that for the Dean's convenience they have arranged their meetings to fall consecutively in a week-long stretch once each month. They turn to him especially when a problem involving people arises. He is said to have chosen at least three corporation presidents. A behind - the - scenes power with Averell Harriman, Dean David may well expect offers of a Cabinet post...
...food neither lowers the prices we pay, or increases the quality of the food we get. Whether or not we eat the food, once it is on our trays it can no longer be saved for use of others. It is possible that, by using some larger measure of judgement in the amount of food we take, we can achieve economics which will allow the University to purchase better food prepare it in better style: and possibly save some for those starving individuals in other parts of the world, who look upon our wastage as the true sin it really...
Pennsylvania and Yale, as was expected, emerged from last weekend's gridiron battles practically without mussing their parts and, with a skein of three victories against no defeats apiece, seemed certain to be on top of the Ivy League heap come the final judgement day, November...
...originally printed, and the one the Sun and other papers did draw, is that the Atomic Energy Commission is unfitted for the job with which it is entrusted. Facts brought out in the sequel rather completely vindicate the AEC at the expense of the Army and corroborate the judgement of Congressmen who placed atomic energy in the hands of civilians. Yet the same group that fought the Atomic Energy Commission and the confirmation of its chairman, David E. Lilienthal, is still trying to put the atom back in the protective custody of the military...
...second concert of the Harvard Symposium on Music Criticism offered last night in the Memorial Church a program of three lengthy choral works commissioned for the occasion. These were, in the order of their performance: a "Last Judgement" by Paul Hindemith; a set of excerpts from Virgil's "Georgies", set to music under the title of "La Terra" by Gian-Francesco Malipiero; and the Genesis account of creation, entitled by its composer, Aaron Copland, "In the Beginning." All three were performed to a miraculous perfection by New York's Collegiate Chorale, under the direction of Robert Shaw. Nell Tangeman sang...